A Great Restaurant with A Cool Bar Scene

a gREAT rESTAURANT...

Our interpretation of a great restaurant is a playful Greek American cuisine with a cozy, intimate and romantic build out, a 2,000 square foot garden, soft lighting, hip music, stellar service and an upscale clientele to share it with.

A cool Bar...

We have two beautiful bars to choose from. One is more casual, the other is more refined but both proudly serve our brewed on premise beers, eclectic wines and our cask aged cocktails while playing really tasteful lounge music.

A Brunch Restaurant...

A colorful cuisine, artful cocktails and drinks, brewed on premise beers, a bounty of wines, attentive service, tasteful music, intimate ambience, beautiful decor and all just steps away from the High line park in Chelsea / Hudson Yards.

PARTY VENUE FOR YOUR EVENT - LET US HOST

DEATH AVENUE

circa 1911, 10th Ave

Death Avenue, our homage to the history of our neighborhood is a hip, upscale Restaurant, Bar & Grill serving a playful Greek/American inspired cuisine. We have two lively bar areas, several quieter dining areas, private party rooms, cozy nooks and a spectacular 2000 square foot garden. Throughout our establishment, we play tasteful lounge music, have soft vintage lighting and hundreds of candles burning. The complete package is super cozy, intimate and extremely romantic. Our bar features cask aged cocktails, a bounty of wines by the glass and a beer tap that is supplied exclusively by our very own boutique subterranean brewery.

RELAX... The name is Homage to history

In 1846, directly in front of our current location, the Hudson River Railroad negotiated a charter with the city to run tracks on an irregular route down 10th Avenue to a freight terminal at Beach and Hudson Streets and then to a final stop at Chambers Street. The trains were sometimes several blocks long, interfering with crossing traffic and pedestrian deaths along the way became fairly common. The New York World referred to the West Side route as Death Avenue in 1892, saying 'many had been sacrificed' to 'a monster which has menaced them night and day.' The Bureau of Municipal Research, a private reform organization, said in a report issued in 1908 that over 56 years, 436 people had been killed on the line. The railroad offered to move the tracks along the river, but that never happened. It wasn't until 1941 that train service finally ended. The New York Herald Tribune reported that the last horse to make the trip was Cyclone, ridden by George Hayden, who wore a 10-gallon hat for the occasion. Death Avenue after a century was finally dead and replaced by the High Line, which today serves as a park.

Paying homage to the neighbors of the past may not be what makes us a great restaurant, its our complete package that makes us great, but to our standards paying homage definitely makes Death Avenue a cool restaurant & bar. ;).